Are we making progress on bus network reform? How fast is the overall health and usability of Melbourne's bus network improving?
Back in March, when Victoria's Bus Plan turned 1000 days I did a bus network health check to gauge where we were at. That analysis found that two-thirds of Melbourne's 349 bus route had a serious timetable or route alignment problem, with about two-fifths of those having both.
124 residential area routes did not meet minimum service standards with regards to operating hours, with 75 of those not running 7 days. Also 166 routes had serious issues such as complexity, weak termini or inefficient overlaps.
More than seven months have since elapsed. Today the Bus Plan turns 1229 days as you can see from the count-up below.
What's been the progress in this, the start of the plan's second thousand days? To find out I checked PTV's list of bus service changes and amended the health check spreadsheet I presented last time to include them.
Some good things did happen with bus services in the last 7 months.
But they are so few in number that you need to go to fractions of 1% to stop rounding errors being a risk when you make pie charts like below:
Hardly a shift. In raw numbers this translates to the following (click for better view):
* The number of routes with serious route alignment or legibility issues fell by one to 165, attributable to the 546 gaining a consistent city end terminus (rather than alternating between Queen Vic Markets and Melbourne University). This indicates only 1 out of the 166 routes that had significant alignment issues got reform in this period - a very slow rate of progress if sustained.
Conclusion
Will the bus reform pace pick up in the next few months?
The Route 800 7 day timetable upgrade, slated for later this year, will be a great Christmas present for much of the south-east.
Last year's GAIC bus funding will mean some new and extended routes. Maybe a year or two off given normal time-lines. An Eynesbury bus got funding in the 2023-24 state budget so that is a near prospect. Beyond that I'd imagine that Mt Atkinson would be a front-runner, with significant political interest and a school bus service starting first term next year.
Earlier this week the premier foreshadowed that the next GAIC round will include transport services, with announcements next year. These additions would be implemented around 2027, give or take a year.
Scope exists for enterprising Labor MPs to include small-scale bus service upgrade requests in their budget bids for 2025. Especially given that infrastructure has been specifically excluded.
Getting 7 day service funded on existing routes does however seem more alive, with examples like the 612, 766 and 800 raising hopes for more. Assuming 5 established area routes get 7 day upgrades each year (FixDandyBuses is backing 802, 804 & 814 for the 2025 budget), all 74 residential area bus routes currently without Sunday service will have it by 2039.
Your views on whether you think this will happen before or after all tram stops are made accessible are appreciated and can be left in the comments below.
See other Building Melbourne's Useful Network items here
When the link to to the page about the changes to 603/604/605 was put up, it didn't lead anywhere. I filed a complaint about it but got no response, but I am guessing some bureaucrat at PTV saw my message and they fixed the broken link, before promptly removing it...
ReplyDeleteRoute 380 will soon be replaced with, not its former route numbers 366 and 367, but 668 and 669 (which sound like Ventura numbers, not Kinetic), adding an extra bus route to the list.
ReplyDeleteHopefully it starts raining so the bus reform slug can move a little bit faster. Is it too much to ask to improve the weekend timetables at the same time as renumbering the routes? The 380 is currently hourly all day Saturday (in other words it's a Sunday timetable), and has a 6PM finish on Sundays (same timetable as Saturday minus evening services) despite running every 15-25 minutes on weekdays during daylight hours with the last service being after 10PM (meanwhile the 370 and 672 book-ending the 380 both wish they were the 380).